High-tech solution for Letlhakane tailings project

19th February 2016

High-tech solution for Letlhakane tailings project

TIDINGS ABOUT TAILINGS Debswana's Letlhakane mine will be retreating its tailings with some help from Rockwell Automation
Photo by: Duane Daws

The contract to supply voltage equipment and automation solutions for Debswana’s Letlhakane mine Tailings Resource Treatment Project (LMTRTP) has been awarded to industrial automation and information provider Rockwell Automation (RA).

The P2.2-billion LMTRTP is meant to safeguard jobs at diamond miner Debswana’s Letlhakane mine, located north of Francistown, in Botswana. The openpit operations are coming to an end, but the tailings plant, once operational, will retreat tailings and should extend the mine life by an additional 20 years. The LMTRTP includes a treatment plant, a 66 kV power line and other infrastructure and services.

RA has been assigned to install several low- and medium-voltage variable-speed drives for the plant’s electrical houses (E-Houses) to drive various pumps, belt feeders, crusher units and mineral processing equipment.

“We proposed our PowerFlex series which will be fitted to customised drive panels, installed in E-Houses and controlled by an RA solution in accordance with Debswana’s standards,” says RA sub-Saharan Africa mining and metals account manager Pat Colarossi.

In terms of the automation solution, RA’s proposal includes plantwide, scalable control technologies. “This will be achieved by using RA’s Integrated Architecture software which has all the core capabilities of a world-class distributed-control system using the Internet of Things – electronic devices and machinery that can connect to the Internet to relay data. This is to achieve a complete connected enterprise, providing a digital dashboard for the process control,” notes Colarossi.

Basically, the RA solution consists of a network of devices relaying data to computer applications (apps) on multiple computers, which are connected to a central hub. The devices, capable of connecting to the Internet – through wired or wireless means – will relay information to a specific app, which processes it and then distributes it to other apps and computers on the network. The information can easily be accessed through a user platform.

RA notes that it is considered one of the world’s largest companies dedicated to industrial automation and information and prides itself on supplying solutions that ensure its customers are more productive. It is headquartered in Milwaukee, in the US, employs about 22 500 people and serves customers in more than 80 countries. Its sub-Saharan Africa regional office is located in Midrand, South Africa.

Debswana Diamond Company is a joint venture between the Botswanan government and South African mining company De Beers, a subsidiary of mining major Anglo American. The company operates four diamond mines – Jwaneng, Orapa, Letlhakane and Damtshaa – in Botswana.

The Jwaneng mine produces about 12.5-million carats a year. An expansion project is under way to extend the mine’s life to 2024. The mine has been in operation since 1982. The Orapa mine, which became fully operational in 1971, also produces about 12-million carats a year and is expected to remain operational until 2026.

Damtshaa is the youngest mine. It became operational in 2003 and has a mine life of about 30 years. It has a less favourable geology than its contemporaries, and produces about 300 000 ct/y.